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Search for planetary candidates within the OGLE stars Adriana V. R. Silva & Patrícia C. Cruz CRAAM/Mackenzie COROT 2005 - 05/11/2005 Summary Method to distinguish between planetary and stellar companions; Observed transits in OGLE data: – 177 stars; Model: – Orbital parameters: P; r/Rs, a/Rs, i – Kepler’s 3rd law + mass-radius relation for MS stars Results tested on 7 known bonafide planets; 28 proposed planetary candidates for spectroscopic follow up Silva & Cruz – Astrophysical Journal Letters, 637, 2006 (astro-ph/0505281) Planet definition Based on the object’s mass According to the IAU WORKING GROUP ON EXTRASOLAR PLANETS (WGESP): stars: objects capable of thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen (>0.075 Msun); Brown dwarf: capable of deuterium burning (0.013<M<0.075 Msun); Planets: objects with masses below the deuterium fusion limit (M<13 MJup), that orbit stars or stellar remains (independently of the way in which they formed). Newton’s gravitation law F GM *m plan r 2 Both planet and star orbit their common center-of-mass. Planet’s gravitational attraction causes a small variation in the star’s light. The effect will be greater for close in massive planets. Extra-solar Planets Encyclopedia www.obspm.fr/encycl/encycl.html 169 planets (until 24/10/2005): – 145 planetary systems – 18 multiple planetary systems 9 transiting: HD 209458, TrES-1, OGLE 10, 56, 111, 113, 132, HD 189733, HD 149026. Radial velocity shifts Planetary mass determined: 2G K P 1/ 3 M p sen i 1 (M * M p )2 / 3 1 e2 Venus transit – 8 June 2004 Transits HD209458 In 2000, confirmation that the radial velocity measurements were indeed due to an orbiting planet. Planetary detection by transits Only 9 confirmed planets. Orbits practically perpendicular to the plane of the sky (i=90o). Radial velocity: planet mass; Transit: planet radius and orbit inclination angle; Ground based telescopes able to detect giant planets only. Satellite based observations needed for detection of Earth like planets. OGLE project 177 planets with “transits”; Only 5 confirmed as planets by radial velocity measurements (10, 56, 111, 113, 132). OGLE data (Udalski 2002, 2003, 2004) Published orbital period Model the data to obtain: – r/Rs (planet radius); – aorb/Rs (orbital radius – assumed circular orbit); – i (inclination angle). Transit simulation Model Star white light image of the sun; Planet dark disk of radius r/Rs; Transit: at each time interval, the planet is centered at a given position in its orbit (with aorb/Rs and i) and the total flux is calculated; Transit Simulation Lightcurve I/I=(r/Rs)2, larger planets cause bigger dimming in brightness. For Jupiter 1% decrease Larger orbital radius (planet further from the star) yield shorter phase interval. Inclination angle close to 90o (a transit is observed). Smaller angles, shorter phase interval; Grazing transits for i<80o. r aorb i Orbit aorb Circular orbits; Period from OGLE project; Perform a search in parameter space for the best values of r/Rs, aorb/Rs, and i (minimum 2). Error estimate of the model parameters from 1000 Monte Carlo simulation, taken from only those within 1 sigma uncertainty of the data; Test of the model 7 known planets: HD 209458, TrES-1, OGLE-TR-10, 56, 111, 113, and 132 OGLE-TR-122 which companion is a brown dwarf with M=0.092 Msun and R=0.12 Rsun (Pont et al. 2005) Synthetic lightcurve with random noise added. M1 (Msun) M2 (Msun) R2 (RJ) Semi-axis AU) angle Input 4.00 0.32 3.9 0.075 84 Output 3.75 0.29 3.6 0.074 85.3 OGLE 132 OGLE 122 OGLE 56 OGLE 111 HD209458 TrES-1 test OGLE 113 OGLE 10 Model test results Fit Parameters M 1 M 2 4 2 a 3 2 R1 GP Rs 3 Equations 4 unknowns: M1, R1, M2, and R2 3 Kepler’s 3rd law: a GP 2 ( M Rs Transit depth I/I: M2) 4 R13 1 2 Rp R2 Rs R1 Mass-radius relationship for MS stars (Allen Astrophysical Quantities, Cox 2000) for both primary and secondary: R1 M 1 RSun M Sun 0 .8 R2 M 2 RSun M Sun 0 .8 Model parameters Planetary candidates selection Density: M 1 M 2 4 2 a R13 GP 2 Rs 3 – Densities < 0.7 to rule out big stars (O, B, A): 1-2% dimming due to 0.3-0.5 Msun companions: 0.7 2.3 sun – Densities > 2.3 maybe due to M dwarfs or binary systems. Radius of the secondary: 28 candidates R2 1.5 RJ Model parameters 0.7<<2.3 R2<1.5 RJ Comparison with other results 100% agreement with: – Elipsoidal variation: periodic modulation in brightness due to tidal effects between the two stars (Drake 2003, Sirko & Paczynski 2003) – Low resolution radial velocity obs. (Dreizler et al. 2002, Konacki et al. 2003) – Giants: espectroscopic study in IR (Gallardo et al. (2005) 6 stars (OGLE-49, 151, 159, 165, 169, 170) failed the criterion of Tingley & Sackett (2005) of >1. Conclusions From the transit observation of a dim object in front of the main star, one obtains: – Ratio of the companion to the main star radii: r/Rs; – Orbital radius (circular) in units of stellar radius: aorb/Rs; – Orbital inclination angle, i, and period, P. Combining Kepler’s 3rd law, a mass-radius relation (RM0.8), and the transit depth infer the mass and radius of the primary and secondary objects. Model was tested successfully on 7 known planets. 28 planetary candidates: density between 0.7 and 2.3 solar density and secondary radius < 1.5 RJ. Method does not work for brown dwarfs with M0.1 Msun and sizes similar to Jupiter’s. CoRoT Method can be easily applied to CoRoT observations of transits.